Originally posted by rjpalmer
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Palmer can see who and what Mike was, and why this would have made him supremely qualified to fake the diary and try to 'pawn it off' in London. In brief, Mike can be moved around the board like a pawn to fit the brief.
Does Palmer not think that Anne, after many years of marriage, would have seen rather more clearly than anyone else on the planet, precisely who and what Mike was by the early 1990s, and - more to the point - who and what he wasn't?
One minute, this female pawn has the 'talent' apparently needed to put her husband's audacious plan into action; the next minute she would have misplaced her sanity and gone ahead with it, only to find her right mind again after filling 63 pages with her own disguised handwriting, and realising she might just have opened Pandora's box.
Mike's sworn affidavit of 5 January 1995 is a different kettle of fish because it was not meant for public consumption. It was secret and non-circulating.
What's the point of making a bogus confession only to keep it secret?
It's very common for people going through an ugly divorce to 'dish' on one's spouse. Especially when there are children involved. One sees it all the time in the papers. It's called leverage.
It's equally common for people going through an ugly divorce to invent faults on the part of their spouse. I've been there and got the T shirt, so I know exactly what lies an ex will tell their family, friends and even the court, to make out they are the innocent victim with the genuine grievance.
I was listening to a podcast a few weeks ago where this happened. The couple was divorcing, and she wanted sole custody. So, she threatened to reveal their dirty secret: that he had been a drug pusher for years. He ended up killer her, unfortunately. What I believe is that in Anne's case, she knew Barrett was on the verge of spilling the beans, so she pulled the rug from underneath him by inventing the "in the family" provenance and coaching her elderly father to support her story.
How on earth would Anne have imagined she could pull the rug from underneath Mike, with an unprovable new provenance for the diary, if they had created it together and he could therefore have spilled the beans at any time? How would her unprovable story have trumped a single dated receipt for any of the raw materials used? How is 'on the verge' even relevant? If Anne knew he had the beans to spill, he could have lodged them already with his solicitor and given her no chance to pull the rug. Mike either had the beans from way back in 1992, or he didn't have any beans by July 1994. Anne was the only person on the planet who would have known either way. So she stood to gain nothing from an assumption that she was getting her story in first, unless she knew Mike had no provable story of his own. This is such a simple concept that Anne must surely have been capable of grasping it, even if Mike evidently struggled. If he thought his affidavit would panic her into talking to him, or letting him see Caroline, he thought wrong.
Mike's secret confessional affidavit was blackmail against Anne Graham. That, and a secondary motive of Gray trying to peddle the exclusive rights to Mike's confession.
As for Gray's attempt to peddle the exclusive rights to Mike's confession, how well did that go and who was standing in his way, apart from Melvin Harris, who was in the best position at that time to assess the worth of Mike's words?
But there's little market for a confession to having perpetrated a hoax, though there's always a market for a Jack the Ripper solution.
As a handy reminder, this was the occasion when Gray told Mike that Melvin Harris had said that: "as soon as Mike comes out, it's in the best interest of everyone to take a concise statement and all the newspapers will [take it] and at the end of it we go down together and swear it as an affidavit and that will be it nailed down, right. It will take a few hours."
What did Melvin know, eh? Did he do the research over the festive period and conclude that he had been wrong, and there was 'little market for a confession to having perpetrated a hoax'? He'd gone to all that trouble and given Mike and Gray all that grief for nothing?
What about the Hitler Diaries, with at least two very good drama documentary series to date, showing in forensic detail how it was done and how the culprit confessed? Down with that sort of thing, there's little market for it.
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